THISDAY

Joda Blames North for High Rate of Out-of-school Children

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Peter Uzoho

A former Permanent Secretary in the Federal Ministry of Education, Ahmed Joda, has blamed northern leaders and the people of the region for the high rate of out-of-school children in the region.

Joda said the inability of the north to take advantage of the scholarshi­ps offered by the federal government in the past decades, like their southern counterpar­ts, was the major contributo­r to the education imbalance against the region.

In an open letter he wrote yesterday from Yola, Adamawa State capital, to the Minister of Education, Malam Adamu

Adamu, Joda, who said he became a permanent secretary in 1971, stated that the 12 million out-of-school children existing in the country as quoted by the present administra­tion can be found in the north.

He said his open letter to the minister was his contributi­on to a previous one written to the minister by Nigeria’s Ambassador to Mexico, an interventi­on he said would help the minister in addressing the education crisis facing the country.

Presenting figures, which showed how the southern states took school enrolment far more serious than the north, he said there was need to relate those figures to the known education crisis in Nigeria today.

The elder statesman recalled that in about 2012, former President Goodluck Jonathan had lamented that there were 10 million out-of-school children in Nigeria, stating that that meant that those out-of-school children were in Northern Nigeria.

He said: “President Muhammadu Buhari has been quoted as saying that the figure of out-of-school children in the country is now 12 million, meaning the figure has grown and is likely to continue to grow.

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